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Solomon Islands 'detiorating rapidly?'

@lex | 08.03.2002 14:41

Peace march/rally against guns organised nationally today.
The objective of the march and rally is to encourage return of weapons and restoration of peace in the country and to coincide with the International Week of Women.

Unnoticed, the once peaceful Solomon Islands slipping further into nightmare

by Michael Field

AUCKLAND, March 8 (AFP) - No one much notices any more but for the record the Solomon Islands, a beautiful and lush chain of Pacific islands, is on the edge of an archaistic nightmare.

“The worsening state of lawlessness here is terrifying,” an expert adviser in the capital Honiara on Guadalcanal island said Thursday. He requested anonymity.

“This place is being run by politicians for the benefit of criminals.... Its going in the direction of Sierra Leone.”

The Gizo Civil Society, based in a once popular tourist spot, this week appealed for Australia and New Zealand to send armed police in to save the country from the lawlessness, the growing use of mercenaries and to stop the flow of arms from the once warring Papua New Guinea island of Bougainville, on the northern border.

They also want an international inquiry “to investigate and charge those who started and profited from the ethnic tension”.

Independent from Britain since 1978, the Solomons could be one of the richest nations in the Pacific. With just 446,000 Melanesian people living on a scattering of seven major islands and hundreds of minor ones with a land area of 28,530 square kilometres, it is rich in fish, gold, forestry and palm oil. It offers unrivalled tourist opportunities.

Known as “the Happy Isles” the country was placid until 1998 when a group of politicians exploited inter-island feeling between those of Guadalcanal and Malaita into civil war. In the three years since 100 people have been killed and 20,000 people turned into refugees. The lush Guadalcanal plans are deserted, oil palm plantations decaying and a new mine on Gold Ridge abandoned. Its “Weather Coast” is a no-go area as a erratic warlord, Harold Keke, runs the place.

In 2000 a new militant group, the Malaita Eagle Force (MEF), co-founded by lawyer Andrew Nori, seized the democratic government and turned Honiara into a Malaitan enclave. Last December democracy was restored with the election of Sir Allan Kemakeza but he included key members of the MEF in cabinet, although Nori last month fled the country and now lives in Wellington.

On Tuesday a group of armed men boarded a cargo ship in Honiara and robbed its crew. Last month a New Zealander was stabbed to death in the town. His killed is known but nothing has been done. A week ago two Malaita special constables were murdered in Noro in the Western Province.

A source who investigated that killing say no Noro local mourned their deaths: they had been terrorising locals.

Opposition politician Alfred Sasako has itemised killings and says the killers are always known: “What horrifies me most is that in each of the cases, the alleged perpetrators are known to police and yet (the police) have made to make one single arrest.”

When the Western Province Premier Rueben Lilo went to Honiara to discuss the deaths, he was held up and robbed by Malaitans.

A cabinet minister did not like a report on him last month in the Solomon Star: rather than write a letter he sent armed men around to get compensation of 5,000 Solomons (1,000 US) dollars.

Remnants of the Bougainville Revolutionary Army, who fought their own decade long civil war, control areas of the Solomons. Last week they shelled the Gizo police station.

Eight Tongan, Fijian, New Zealand and Australian peace monitorers this week abandoned their last post outside Honiara, fearful of their safety.

Dengue fever broke out this week in Honiara, claiming four lives. Hospitals, however, are closing down amidst security fevers. Wounded combatants from various rival gangs have been murdered in hospital beds. Malaria, always endemic, is surging again.

The expert source noted wryly that while ordinary people can get no protection from law and order, and the government has no money, logging ships from Asia are queuing up to take away much the rain-forest of New Georgia. One of the world’s largest lagoons, Morovo, is now being stained with run-off from the clear-felling.

“The police admit they can do nothing about the logging, its just going on, and the government and the people are making nothing out of it,” he said.

“It makes you wonder who this country is run for now.”

mjf




Copyright © 2001 Michael J Field
Last modified: March 08, 2002

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